taz.die tageszeitung receives Document Freedom Germany Award

on: 2013-03-27

The German newspaper taz.die tageszeitung (TAZ) receives this year's
Document Freedom Day award. With this award, the Free Software
Foundation Europe (FSFE) and the Foundation for a Free Information
Infrastructure (FFII) honour organisations that make exemplary use of
Open Standards.

Ralf Klever (in charge of Document Freedom inside the TAZ-IT) holding the DFD-certificate - sourrounded by the teams from TAZ, FSFE and FFII

The TAZ receives the Document Freedom award because it delivers
its electronic paper to its subscribers in a choice of open formats,
and without digital restrictions (DRM).
"We are awarding the TAZ with the Document Freedom Award for their
longstanding commitment to Open Standards and continuos efforts in
offering their newspaper without restrictions" says Erik Albers,
Fellowship Coordinator Berlin.

TAZ subscribers can receive their paper in HTML, PDF, ePub, and even plain text formats. HTML files form the basis of the World Wide Web. The Portable Document Format (PDF) was published as a standard by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) in 2008. Adobe has granted anyone the right to make and distribute PDF files without restrictions. Plain text files (.txt) can easily be read or opened by any thousands of applications, independent of any platform, product, or vendor. "Plain text files have great benefits for libraries," highlights Elisabeth Klein, a humanities scholar with close connections to academic libraries in Germany. "They can offer easy access to works using a lot of different devices. Users and researchers can efficiently search and analyse them."

ePub is an Open Standard for electronic books. Rather than being bound to a particular vendor, users can open files with the .epub extension with a wide range of programs and devices.
"We use Free and Open formats, because we don't like to put our readers in a cage - even it it's made of gold. Only by using Open Standards without DRM we are able to spread TAZ news media as widely as possible" says Ralf Klever, Head of IT in the TAZ.

Stephan Uhlmann, FFII board member, adds: "We congratulate TAZ for their
firm stance on the usage of Open Standards. The TAZ has a history of covering
contemporary political movements very closely, which makes this an important
contribution to preserve this documentation in open and accessible document
formats for future generations."